Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Worcestershire County Council

Local government body in England

Worcestershire County Council

Summary

Local government body in England

FieldValue
nameWorcestershire County Council
coa_picArms of Worcestershire County Council.svg
coa_res100px
logo_picWorcestershire County Council.svg
logo_res250px
house_typeNon-metropolitan county
leader1_typeChair
leader1Louis Stephen
party1
Green
election122 May 2025
leader2_typeLeader
leader2Jo Monk
party2
Reform UK
election222 May 2025
leader3_typeChief Executive
leader3Paul Robinson
party3
election3March 2018
seats57 councillors
structure1United_Kingdom_Worcestershire_Parliament_2025.svg
structure1_res250px
:borderdarkgray}} Reform UK (26)
:borderdarkgray}} Conservative (12)
:borderdarkgray}} Green (8)
:borderdarkgray}} Liberal Democrats (7)}}
:borderdarkgray}} Labour (2)
:borderdarkgray}} Independent (2)
term_length4 years
voting_system1First past the post
last_election11 May 2025
next_election13 May 2029
session_roomWorcester - County Hall (geograph 3976307).jpg
meeting_placeCounty Hall, Spetchley Road, Worcester, WR52NP
website

Green Reform UK : Reform UK (26) : Conservative (12) : Green (8) : : Labour (2) : Independent (2)

Worcestershire County Council is the county council for the non-metropolitan county of Worcestershire in England. Its headquarters are at County Hall in Worcester, the county town. The council consists of 57 councillors. The council has been under no overall control since the 2025 election, being run by a Reform UK minority administration.

The county council was first created in 1889. In 1974 the council was abolished when Worcestershire and neighbouring Herefordshire were merged to form a new county called Hereford and Worcester. In 1998 Worcestershire and Herefordshire became separate counties again, and Worcestershire County Council was re-established.

History

Elected county councils were created in 1889 under the Local Government Act 1888, taking over many administrative functions which had previously been performed by unelected magistrates at the quarter sessions. The boroughs of Worcester and Dudley were considered large enough to provide their own county-level services and so they were made county boroughs, independent from Worcestershire County Council. The county council was elected by and provided services to the rest of the county, which area was termed the administrative county. The 1888 Act also said that any urban sanitary districts which straddled county boundaries were to be placed entirely in the county which had the majority of that district's population, which saw Worcestershire gain the part of Redditch which had been in Warwickshire.

The first elections to the county council were held in January 1889 and it formally came into being on 1 April 1889. On that day it held its first official meeting at Worcester Guildhall. The first chairman was George Hastings, who was the Liberal Unionist Member of Parliament for East Worcestershire.

There were a number of changes to the boundaries of the administrative county over the years. It ceded territory in the north-east to Birmingham on several occasions, and the complicated boundaries in the south with Gloucestershire and Warwickshire were simplified in the 1930s. In 1966 Oldbury was transferred to the new County Borough of Warley, which was ceremonially associated with Worcestershire but outside the administrative county controlled by the county council.

The administrative county of Worcestershire was abolished in 1974. The boroughs of Halesowen and Stourbridge were transferred to the new West Midlands county, and the rest of administrative county merged with Herefordshire and the county borough of Worcester to form a new non-metropolitan county called Hereford and Worcester. Hereford and Worcester County Council therefore took over the old Worcestershire County Council's functions for most of its area.

Hereford and Worcester only existed as a county for 24 years. It was abolished in 1998 as part of the 1990s United Kingdom local government reforms and divided into separate counties of Herefordshire and Worcestershire, with Worcestershire County Council being re-established as the upper-tier local authority for Worcestershire.

Governance

Worcestershire County Council provides county-level services. District-level services are provided by the six district councils:

  • Bromsgrove District Council
  • Malvern Hills District Council
  • Redditch Borough Council
  • Worcester City Council
  • Wychavon District Council
  • Wyre Forest District Council

Much of the county is also covered by civil parishes, which form a third tier of local government.

Political control

The council has been under no overall control since the 2025 election, with Reform UK being the largest party. They subsequently formed a minority administration after that election.

The first elections to the re-established Worcestershire County Council were held in 1997, initially operating as a shadow authority until the new arrangements came into effect on 1 April 1998. Political control of the council since 1998 has been as follows:

PartyTenure
1998–2005
2005–2025
2025–present

Leadership

The leaders of the council since 1998 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
Carol Warren1 Apr 19982001
George Lord20016 Nov 2010
Adrian Hardman18 Nov 201014 Jan 2016
Simon Geraghty14 Jan 2016May 2025
Jo Monk22 May 2025

Composition

Following the 2025 election and then a byelection in October the composition of the council is:

PartyCouncillorsTotal57
26
12
8
7
2
2

The next election is due in 2029.

Cabinet

Worcestershire County Council currently operates using a Leader and Cabinet system.

Worcestershire County Council's cabinet is composed of nine Reform UK councillors including the Leader of the council. Cabinet members work closely with the directors and professional officers of the council to ensure the successful implementation of the decisions they make.

TitleCouncillor
Leader of the CouncilJo Monk
Adult Social CareSue Eacock
Children and FamiliesJustin Bowen
Finance and Corporate ServicesRob Wharton
Education and Special Educational Needs and/or DisabilitiesStephen Foster
Health and WellbeingSatinder Bell
Highways and TransportKarl Perks
Business and SkillAlan Amos
Environment and CommunitiesIan Cresswell
Deputy Leader (as of Dec 2025)Rob Wharton
Local Government ReorganisationJo Monk

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2005 the council has comprised 57 councillors representing 52 electoral divisions, with each division electing one or two councillors. Elections are held every four years.

Premises

The county council has its headquarters at County Hall on Spetchley Road on the outskirts of Worcester. The building was purpose-built as the headquarters of Hereford and Worcester County Council and had been completed in 1978. The building transferred to the re-established Worcestershire County Council as part of the 1998 reforms.

Shire Hall]]: Meeting place of the first incarnation of the county council
County Buildings, St Mary's Street: County Council's headquarters 1930–1974

Having held its first meeting in 1889 at Worcester Guildhall, the first Worcestershire County Council later established its usual meeting place at Shire Hall, Worcester, a courthouse which had been built in 1835. County Buildings was built alongside Shire Hall in 1930 to house the council's administrative offices. County Buildings and Shire Hall continued to be used by the successor Hereford and Worcester County Council until the new County Hall at Spetchley Road was completed in 1978.

References

References

  1. {{cite legislation UK. (1888)
  2. (6 April 1889). "Worcestershire County Council". Berrow's Worcester Journal.
  3. [[Local Government Act 1972]]
  4. {{cite legislation UK. (1996)
  5. "Election Maps". Ordnance Survey.
  6. (22 May 2025). "Reform UK takes over leadership of county council". BBC News.
  7. "Compositions Calculator". University of Exeter.
  8. (2 May 2025). "Reform makes big gains in Worcestershire". BBC News.
  9. (1 April 1998). "Fiasco on eve of counties' long-awaited separation". Birmingham Post.
  10. (25 May 2001). "Severn - Carol Warren (Labour)". Worcester News.
  11. (4 July 2001). "Lord is new leader". Worcester News.
  12. (12 November 2010). "Councillors focus on leadership after resignation of Dr George Lord". Worcester News.
  13. (3 April 2018). "Worcestershire sex assault council leader dies". BBC News.
  14. (19 November 2010). "County Council selects Adrian Hardman as leader". Worcester News.
  15. (29 December 2015). "Adrian Hardman to quit as Worcestershire County Council leader after drink drive charge". Bromsgrove Advertiser.
  16. "Council minutes, 14 January 2016".
  17. "Council minutes, 22 May 2025".
  18. "Worcestershire". Thorncliffe.
  19. Manninen, Terhi. "Cabinet".
  20. (2025-12-04). "Alan Amos". Wikipedia.
  21. {{cite legislation UK. (2005)
  22. "Complaints Department". Worcestershire County Council.
  23. (23 May 2018). "Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh visits Worcester County Hall". Getty Images.
  24. {{National Heritage List for England
  25. (10 June 2020). "Adding a New Layer: 20th Century Heritage in Worcestershire - Civil Buildings".
  26. (2017). "Local List of Heritage Assets". Worcester City Council.
  27. (1976). "The Municipal Year Book". Municipal Journal.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Worcestershire County Council — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report